Most of us don't discuss that though - it is deliberate mischaracterisation of our arguments by people who haven't bothered to listen to us.
I agree.
The way the reuters article is written is... 'interesting'. It is like they just asked Blakemore or someone like him for his opinion in order to give him some space to either protect his vested interests or blatantly misrepresent the situation for some other reason. It should be impossible to be a professor of neuroscience and also genuinely not understand that the body of research that has been produced over the last decades does anything else than show that the approaches we are subjected to are, at best, mostly a useless waste of time for everyone involved.
Our entire point is that Cochrane's reviews should, in fact, be based on scientific evidence and not influenced by commercial pressures. What we are trying to get rid of is non-scientists posing as the real thing trying to make money off abusing sick people (while probably also displacing real treatment, but that is debateable and at least somewhat situational). If pointing this stuff out counts as harrassment, I guess being worse than when you started a treatment can count as recovered - admittedly, I am not a native speaker of ye olde English language, but even to me it seems like these people just generally do not understand (or want to understand) the very words they use.
It should not be a decision to 'reach with difficulty' at all to scrap a review that was done by someone who did a meta-review without understanding how to evaulate the topic properly (as in, technically correct from a scientific standpoint). There really are not a lot of different opinions that can be formed from looking at the actual research (i.e., don't just skim and read the 'conclusions' section...) other than that we do not understand how to exercise people with ME safely, or if we want to exercise them at all (but so far what we have is pointing towards 'rather not').
Again, the article concludes with the same strawman-debate they tend to when dictated by people who actively do not want to understand the discussion around ME - that some people don't want a mental disorder label or prefer to blahblahblah all in the mind something something body dualism physical disorder influenced by yaddayaddayadda, when the real point is and always has been that the evidence from the very trials which are always cited either is of so poor quality that it is no evidence of anything at all (due to trial design flaws etc), or show that the 'psychological approaches' do not work period even in other disorders like depression. We are not primarily arguing that we are debilitated in this way or that way and therefore this or that has to be whateverwhichway suits us, we are arguing that we would like approaches that actually work.
It is not helping that, nonsurprisingly, the reuters piece somehow did not stress the fact that the words 'improve' and 'recover', when used by the people who write the studies in question, tend to not refer to these concepts as they would be understood by people outside the psychiatric field, but really mean 'regain as much control over one's life as can reasonably be expected'. So the people who oppose our criticism may be technically correct in a really weird way if you view the issue from inside their own field - if you did everything you can to get as much control back as was possible and still have a null result you have achieved 'recovery' in the way they use the term. But it has to be stressed that them talking about recovery literally means 'no change at all'!
If Blakemore is not misrepresented here in what he has actually said, i.e. him shifting the blame on those lobbying in favour of science and somehow failing to mention that Cochrane initially has to have caved in to pressure from people trying to push treatments without evidence to make some money (or even darker purposes) - or at least genuinely made a mistake - is what he actually said, I do not see how he can retain his position as a professor in a scientific field. Maybe he has not really read the studies which he defends, but if he hasn't it is still inexcusably lazy at this point.